Help! My husband takes premixed insulin, and four out of seven mornings, his fasting blood sugar registers 300-400 mg/dl [16.7-22.2 mmol/L]. In addition, three out seven nights per week, at night, his body becomes very warm (almost hot) to the touch, and then he breaks out in a rash which is always on his back and proceeds to his chest. Although it does not itch terribly, I immediately wipe him down with alcohol which soothes him somewhat. I have not tried Benadryl yet. When the rash appears, his sugar reads 350-410 mg/dl [19.4-22.8 mmol/L]. Also, if a person with diabetes has an infection somewhere in his/her body does this also elevate blood sugar?

Answer:

Any underlying illness is capable of raising the blood sugars. I am not sure why your husband is having the dramatic rash you describe. Insulin allergies are generally most prominent at the injection site and not consistent with the current problem.

It seems to me that you and your husband needs to work with his physician to make sure he does not have another kind of medical problem causing the night sweats. This is certainly too serious to let continue without trying to find the underlying problem.

Last Updated: Tuesday April 06, 2010 15:09:48
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